Posts Tagged ‘neoliberalism’

Robert Reich on the One Big Beautiful Bill

May 23, 2025

Reich asked people to share….. Hence I’m sharing – and as usual it demonstrates Trump’s neoliberal priorities – Benefit his own class of people first, and stomp on everyone else.

The bill is over a thousand pages long, it is almost certain that there are pork-barrel sections in it for particular Republicans.

No sensible bill should be that long, Congress should know what it is voting on.

********************

Reich says:

The old professor in me thinks the best way to convey to you how utterly awful the so-called “one big beautiful bill” passed by the House last night actually is would be to give you this short ten-question exam. (Answers are in parenthesis, but first try to answer without looking at them.)

1. Does the House’s “one big beautiful bill” cut Medicare?

2. Because the bill cuts Medicaid, how many Americans are expected to lose Medicaid coverage?

3. Will the tax cut in the bill benefit the rich or the poor or everyone?

4. How much will the top 0.1 percent of earners stand to gain from it?

5. If you figure in the benefit cuts and the tax cuts, will Americans making between about $17,000 and $51,000 gain or lose?

  • (They’ll lose about $700 a year).

6. How about Americans with incomes less than $17,000?

  • (They’ll lose more than $1,000 per year on average).

7. How much will the bill add to the federal debt?

8. Who will pay the interest on this extra debt?

  • (All of us, in both our tax payments and higher interest rates for mortgages, car loans, and all other longer-term borrowing.)

9. Who collects this interest?

  • (People who lend to the U.S. government, 70 percent of whom are American and most of whom are wealthy.)

10. Bonus question: Is the $400 million airplane from Qatar a gift to the United States for every future president to use, or a gift to Trump for his own personal use?

  • (It’s a personal gift because he’ll get to use it after he leaves the presidency.)

11. [In another email Reich argues that: the courts are now without ability to enforce judgements against Trump and his coterie in government.]

The courts have one power to make their orders stick: holding federal officials in contempt and enforcing such contempt citations against them. [However the big bill states]

“No court of the United States may use appropriated funds to enforce a contempt citation for failure to comply with an injunction or temporary restraining order if no security was given when the injunction or order was issued….”

As U.C. Berkeley School of Law Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law Erwin Chemerinsky notes, this provision would eliminate any restraint on Trump.

‘Without the contempt power, judicial orders are meaningless and can be ignored. There is no way to understand this except as a way to keep the Trump administration from being restrained when it violates the Constitution or otherwise breaks the law. …

‘This would be a stunning restriction on the power of the federal courts. The Supreme Court has long recognized that the contempt power is integral to the authority of the federal courts. Without the ability to enforce judicial orders, they are rendered mere advisory opinions which parties are free to disregard.”

With this single provision, in other words, Trump will have crowned himself king.

[12. Another source states that the US government’s authority to borrow, known as the debt limit, will increase by $4tn. Anyone who has followed American Politics knows that Republicans try to stop debt limit expansion when there is a Democrat President. It also admits that Trump will hugely increase the deficit despite the chaos generated by Doge. This is usually considered bad.]

[If you didn’t know this,] that’s because of

(1) distortions and cover-ups emanating from Trump and magnified by Fox News and other rightwing outlets.

(2) A public that’s overwhelmed with the blitzkrieg of everything Trump is doing, and can’t focus on this. [“Flood the zone with shit” as Bannon says]

(3) Outright silencing of many in the media who fear retaliation from the Trump regime if they reveal things that Trump doesn’t want revealed, [and the ownership of Media by Billionaires and corporations, who will benefit in the short term from Trump’s policies.]

Are Trump voters responsible for him being anti-democracy and destroying the country?

February 17, 2025

No.

All 77,302,580 Trump voters do not have to support Trump’s moves for anti-democracy and destroying the country.

As far as I know Trump never campaigned saying he is anti-democracy and aimed at destroying the country. So few people. who voted for him were voting for that.

Trump also did not get 50% of the total electorate voting for him, he even got less than 50% of those who did vote. Other Presidents have had much bigger majorities in the Electoral College, and it did not stop them being opposed. There was no landslide of support.

So Trump can have lied (surprise!), or completely misunderstood what he is doing (Surprise!!!!). And, sadly with high-rating 100% pro-Trump media, many people may never have encountered the truth of what he promised to do.

So, lets ignore the fact that he threatened to terminate the constitution to prevent him from losing elections, and promised to be a dictator. People were told this was exaggerated or even lies, despite being truth. We cannot blame people for believing what trusted sources tell them repeatedly. This is unfortunately how people work, when they cannot have had experience.

My argument is that Trump does not know, or understand, what he is doing is bad. He may even be completely well-intentioned in his actions.

The problem for the USA is that Trump is a corporate boss, with no adult experience of being anything else.

Bosses never have to deal with democracy. They can more or less do what they like to their workers, to their company and to their property. They can betray and deceive other people. If they have influence and personal riches they can get away with almost anything (as Trump has), unless corporations of equal power get in the way.

On top of this, Trump thinks he knows everything. Therefore he does not have to consult or negotiate with anyone. People just have to do what he says, because he is the boss and knows best. People who advise anything else are defining themselves as enemies.

Partly because he is a positive thinker, Trump forbids people to discuss issues he does not like. Events he deliberately ignores did not happen, or will recover by the force of his personality and positive thought. People who do not gush over him and agree to ignore disliked events, are disloyal to America, hence they have to be sacked. Climate change, for example, is not real, or to be mentioned by government departments. Pandemics are likewise not anything people can discuss. This, in his mind, makes America safe again.

You cannot run any non-totalitarian State like that, Especially democratic states. People are supposed to be able to disagree, they are supposed to notice unpleasant events. And even totalitarian States will fail without accurate feedback about the world, because the leader governs in fantasy and nobody who wants to survive can advise the great leader to change their mind or understanding.

Trump is ending democracy not deliberately, but because he does not understand what it needs or how it works. He thinks being a President makes him the unchallenged boss of that country..

Trump also does not understand how social and economic forces work. Again this is partly because he is a boss, and all bosses care about is the bottom line and their profit. This may be fair enough for a company, but Presidents and politicians should consider what is good for most people in the country in the long run. They should not be governing just for personal profit, the profit of shareholders, or for the next quarter. They should be governing for everyone, and for the best possible next 200 years at least.

However, over the last 40 years, for nearly all Republicans, and many Democrats have embraced neoliberalism: “what is good for big business is good for the country.” Which often translates as what is good for bosses is good for the country. If that means lots of homelessness, if that means lots of disease ridden people, if that means low wages and no hope of social mobility no matter how hard you work then, that is the price you pay to support big business and The Market. Trump seems to agree. Anything which might inhibit bosses or profits like Climate Change should be ignored. We should not even prepare for likely future disasters.

So he will continue and intensify the policies that have made America “Second Rate’’ if you will.

In terms of the world. Trump has clearly shown the USA cannot be trusted. He has surrendered to Putin over Ukraine before the negotiations started (breaking his own principle laws of the deal), and without even talking to the Ukrainians, or NATO. The sensible thing for NATO to do is to reject any negotiated solution if it does not include Russian withdrawal and compensation for the damage of the invasion, and to discuss whether to expel the USA from NATO as it clearly considers it is a boss and not a partner. Trump might be happy with the expulsion, but I suspect he will be offended, and that might lead to war, and to American deaths over events that could have been avoided.

His proposal to override Palestinian property rights in Gaza and ethically cleanse Palestinians by force to make money for real estate developers, probably including himself, also demonstrates that he cares nothing for Democracy or poorer people in general. Profit is everything, consequently he is, for neoliberal minds, doing good.

His overseas policies announce that the USA is no longer a force for good, but a force for profit and dictatorship. The free world can no longer be led by the USA. End of story. Maybe Trump wants to be the leader of the autocratic world, and destroy democracy elsewhere as well?

Non of this was known by all Trump voters before the election. In many cases, it could not have been known. As a result, they do not have to support his anti democracy moves or his destruction of the USA. Some of the more badly informed, will continue supporting him, because they do not understand or wish to understand, but it is probable that Trump will continue to lose support as his actions come to affect people, and they lose government support they depended upon, and prices keep rising while wages do not. Most Trump supporters have been deceived, but they it is possible they can start seeing what is happening, and admit to themselves that the deceiver deceived.

That is, unless Democrats drive them away, because its easier to attack supporters than to attack Trump.

Democrats do seem to be that stupid sometimes.

Making America Great Again

November 9, 2024

I have no idea what this slogan means, because President Trump never seems to explain it. It is probably appealing to people because it sounds good and has no content to disagree with.

However, in Agenda 47, his speeches and past behaviour, he does explain, or demonstrate, the means of getting there, which might be more controversial, and suggest what he means by ‘great’.

To him US greatness is brought about by:

1. Increasing prices and inflation by raising tariffs. This may start a ‘tariff war’ in which other nations put tariffs on US imports and harm US export markets. The upside is that US companies may abandon their capital invested in other countries and come back to the USA, or perhaps they may think the tariffs against US exports will cancel the US market out. We don’t know – we just know inflation will increase.

2. Giving corporations and hyper-rich people even bigger tax cuts, because they are the important people in the USA. Everyone else is perhaps useful for voting in corporate power and providing cheap labour, but without any other value.

3. Getting rid of regulations that stop companies from injuring workers, poisoning communities or harming the planetary systems. Making sure no business, especially any associated with Donald Trump, can ever be convicted of fraud.

4. Preventing shareholders and businesses doing anything about climate change, while handing climate policy over to oil companies.

5. Getting rid of the minimum wage so labour is as cheap in the US as in China or Bangladesh and can compete.

6. Getting rid of Affordable Healthcare and replacing it with something more profitable for companies. Making sure that you can only get vaccinated if you leave the US.

7. Scrap 2 trillion dollars from social services and regulatory enforcement, to make sure people have to work even if they are 90, and to stop the State interfering with corporate activities unless those activities impact the President harmfully. These cutbacks help provide the funds for corporate tax cuts. Musk admits this will hurt ordinary Americans, but the imagined future greatness justifies the acts.

8. Making sure that Donald Trump does not get prosecuted or convicted of any crime at all, no matter what that crime is. Ordering those he appoints to head the FBI and the DoJ to drop all and any charges against him, while proclaiming the charges to be political only.

9. Making sure that the FBI and DoJ go after anyone who has disagreed with, or will disagree with, Donald Trump, to bring harmony and agreement to the US.

10. Deregistering or continually suing media that does not 100% support Donald Trump all the time, as they are clearly unpatriotic. This gets rid of those scum who accuse the President of misrepresenting reality, and stops people worrying about what is being done, what mistakes are being made, and what climate events are happening and the lack of government response.

11. Stopping climate and weather research, as they just make things worse and cause people to worry, or think that maybe we should not be mining more fossil fuels.

12. Getting rid of all people working for the government who might not be completely obedient to President Trump. Loyalty to the Constitution and the USA should obviously be secondary to loyalty to President Trump and to Republican ideology.

13. Arguing the President can terminate, or ignore, the Constitution. It is an old document that does not recognize the need for absolute Presidential power.

14. Making sure to give pro-Trump Christians control of State apparatus, as the USA is a Christian nation, built on Christian principles, and subservient to Christian power (apart from the President of course). Christians who don’t support Trump are atheists, heretics or demon possessed.

15. Hitting sexual deviants as hard as possible to get rid of lesbians, gays, trans people and so on. They probably should be burnt alive to please the Christians, and make America Straight Again.

16. Making sure more women die of complications in pregnancy, by valuing the fetus more than the mother.

17. Deporting tens of millions of “illegals”, many of whom probably do not have anywhere to go back to. This will require rounding people up with armed force (it will be bloody, said Trump), setting up camps to store them, hundreds of millions in transport unless cattle trucks and ships are used. Non-white people will need to make sure they always have identity or citizenship papers, or they may be picked up (and their papers lost). Americans will get used to armed bands rounding people up, so it won’t be noticeable when the Democrats and RINOs go.

18. Building trust and respect overseas by abandoning allies, as was done with those Afghans friendly to the US, Kurds and so on.

19. Handing Ukraine over to Putin and supporting Putin’s expansion of Russia.

20. Helping Netanyahu slaughter Palestinians and start a war with Iran as this will bring about Armageddon and the final days and please the right-Christian electorate.

21. Cuddle up to dictators to preserve world peace and discuss how to bring order to the USA and get rid of undesirables. Become part of the Axis of Evil as that is really cool.

22. Find new ways for Donald Trump to profiteer from Taxpayers. The boarding secret service people at Trump properties at maximum price is wearing a bit thin.

Media climate denial

April 21, 2024

A list of points in the Globalist Billionaire owned Murdoch media (Fox, Australian, Sun, Aus Daily Telegraph, etc). What am I missing?:

* There is no such thing as global warming,

* Global warming is natural and we can’t do anything,

* Climate change is not a big deal. The climate is always changing.

* Fixing global warming will destroy the economy and destroy jobs,

* Fixing global warming harms all the fun in life,

* Fixing climate will destroy your liberty, especially your liberty to make your own smog,

* The problem is population, not how much GHG are emitted per head of population

* There are more important things to worry about than climate change,

* Its a socialist conspiracy and we should ignore it,

* Look! this renewable farm destroys a forest! (lets ignore coal, fracking, oil and gas damage),

* We need more oil,

* The problem will get fixed by the free market, so there is nothing we need do.

Worsening climate

April 7, 2024

Some recent articles which should be read together:

1) Greenhouse Gases are still increasing and are now at record levels. The last time they were this high, sea levels “were around 75ft (22 metres) higher than they are today”

2) Rain forests equal to an area nearly the size of Switzerland were cleared from previously undisturbed states last year, according to figures compiled by the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the University of Maryland. This almost certainly lowers the amounts of CO2 being removed from the atmosphere.

3) We have just had the 10th consecutive monthly average record temperature. This has shattered all previous records, and unless there is some weird climate thing going on that we don’t know about, indicates a clear and severe warming phase. Over the past 12 months, average global temperatures have been 1.58C above pre-industrial levels. This makes it look like we have already broken the 1.5C barrier.

4) Some Antarctic temperatures have been over 35 degrees C warmer than usual. There appears to be an “abrupt critical transition” in the continent’s climate, and not surprisingly ice sheets are melting, and the record GHG levels are almost certainly pushing temperatures up.

5) Just 57 companies are linked to 80% of greenhouse gas emissions since 2016. Just a few of the polluter elites are promoting and profiting from potential destruction of world civilisation.

We need to reduce fossil fuel burning and deforestation. However, we appear to be doing the exact opposite. For example,

6) Just 2% of the EU’s gas capacity has planned retirement date despite pledges to decarbonise and new projects will increase the continent’s gas generation capacity by 27%

And

7) The world’s fossil-fuel producers will be nearly quadrupling the amount of oil and gas being extracted from newly approved projects by the end of this decade, with the US leading the way.

Governments and business are basically boosting the crisis to support polluter elites.

We have to act locally now.

Complexity, Neoliberalism and Generosity

April 6, 2024

Neoliberalism can, in its cosmology, seem to recognise complexity, but this may be a delusion as it also seems to involve a politics of enforced corporate dominance, which is incompatible with complexity. It generally is inferior, as an approach to ecological catastrophe, to what I’ve called climate generosity.

Complexity

So first of all, let us list some of the points recognised by a complexity based cosmology.

  • 1) Flux
  • 2) Multiple interactions
  • 3) So complicated that knowledge is distributed, a simplification and uncertain.
  • 4) Small changes make large differences. Tippling points can change the system.
  • 5) Limited predictability in human terms.
  • 6) Systems (as categorised by humans) intermesh, and cannot be isolated from one another
  • 7) Systems display both emergent order and emergent maladaptation from other points of view.
  • 8) Resilience requires diversity of response, biodiversity is good etc.
  • 9) Planning enforced by humans of limited understanding may not generate the results intended and is probably harmful.

Neoliberalism and Complexity

Neoliberalism appears to recognise a complex cosmos. It recognises uncertain and distributed knowledge but tries to reduce all knowledge to the price system, even if the price system can only cover things that are for sale, and is distorted by corporations teaming up to profiteer or remove new competitors, internal sales, transfer pricing, advertising, hype and propaganda, below cost competitive discounting to drive out competitors and so on. It pretends that local members of a corporation can always react to local knowledge rather than to top-down direction.

It recognises that centralised planning is problematic, but supports corporate planning, and plans to stop any ‘unlimited democratic’ control to restrain corporate action for the general good. It often appears to claim the ecological system is controllable, linear, isolated and can be repaired or replaced. It suppresses the search for unintended consequences. This will likely prevent desired futures from emerging.

It does not recognise that systems overlap and influence each other. The corporate economy is supposed to dominate ecologies rather than operate within ecologies. Contemporary neoliberalism may well have risen to powerful as a tool to overcome ecological movements, and demands for lower and less harmful pollution and less destructive forms of extraction, and hence challenges to corporate operations. Oil companies ignored their own research showing that burning fossil fuels promoted climate change, and promoting increased usage. Potential tipping points to ecological upheaval are ignored. Neoliberal political parties seem largely hostile to environmentalism, except when it can delay renewables. Property is ripped out of its connective social and ecological background of existence, to make it restricted.

Neoliberalism does not value diversity. It supports corporate organisation and the heteronormative nuclear family operating within the market. It does not support varied families, community action, non-market activity, or non-market power structures. While neoliberalism recognises ‘spontaneous order,’ it generally supports and enforces market based orders, rather than recognise flux.

Complexity and climate generosity

On the other hand generosity is happy with flux and multiple interactions. It assumes local people have the best knowledge but may need help to get going. It hopes that small local actions can lead to system change, it does not have to enforce change. It also recognises that the system may be shifting into maladaption for social organisation and that is an incentive to support emergent local resilience and diverse responses. Generosity can easily assume human and ecological interaction, and even the ‘ecology’s generosity’ which requires a generous rather than exploitative response, and does not require ecologies to be submissive to human needs. It does not have to engage in forceful planning, as its basis is to help people do things they want to do to help themselves.

Summary

Despite indications neoliberalism might be compatible with complexity, its political attempts to reduce everything to capitalism undermines any potential connections, and undermines its ability to deal with the climate change and eco-upheaval it generates. It will continue to largely ignore the problems and postpone action.

Climate generosity, seems not only an effective non-delay tactic, but one which is more compatible with the apparent complex nature of the world.


Externalities vs Illth

April 1, 2024

I’m currently trying to write something on economics and what are called ‘externalities’. I’m not an economist, so am writing this in the hope of feedback telling me how I’m wrong, because it seems obvious I must be wrong.

Initial phrasing of the problem

‘Externalities’ seem to be usually thought of as those parts of an economic transaction which have harms, costs or benefits which affect people who external to that transaction. Externalities are usually described as positive (when someone can benefit without paying) for example clean air away from cities, or a neighbour’s bees fertilising one’s plants. A negative externality should (but often does not) include all forms of social and individual illth produced by economic activity (although illth production could come from the State, or other institutions). One immediate problem of this approach is that externalities as seen as coming from individual transactions rather than being systemic, so it localises and individualises the problem. For me, the major flaw of externality theory, is that it does not seem to be interested in preventing illth, it just wants to make some of the costs internal to the system, or even worse try to pretend illth is already costed and hence acceptable to the people who suffer from it.

In summary, my objections to the way the concept of externalities works, are:

  • Definitions and treatment of externalities appear to aim at removing illth from consideration and confining it by making it local, and fixable through monetary payment (compensation or tax). They rarely seem to see illth production as a norm inherent to a system which ‘needs’ cheapness of operation for the highest possible profit, and so generally do not look for solutions at the system level. They also generally do not see the system as potentially self-damaging. Hence I will define a negative externality as a socially generated source of illth, whether intended or otherwise, expected or not. People, or groups, should be held responsible for the illth that they inflict on others, and we should not pretend the illth problem is solved when people and companies have to pay something for it.
    • Research in the early 2000s by Nicholas Z. Muller, Robert Mendelsohn, and William Nordhaus showed that in some businesses (notably solid waste combustion, petroleum-fired electric power generation, sewage treatment, coal-fired electric power generation, stone mining and quarrying, marinas, and petroleum and coal products), the costs of externalities exceeded any value those businesses, added to the economy.
    • Kapp argues modern business enterprise operates on the basis of shifting costs onto others as normal practice to make profits. [Kapp, Karl William (1971) Social costs, neo-classical economics and environmental planning. The Social Costs of Business Enterprise, 3rd edition. K. W. Kapp. Nottingham, Spokesman: 305–18 ]
  • The standard model uses involves only three people, seller, purchaser and person suffering the illth. It effectively localizes illth (‘spillovers’, ‘neighbourhood effects’) rather than sees it as possibly affecting the functionality of whole systems. In other words writing on externalities generally ignores complexity, system and relationships – other than the price system.
  • Much ‘free market’ economics seems to think that illth can always be reduced to monetary compensation and agreement. Economists don’t have to look at the type of illth involved. Consequently, if people are monetarily compensated, then illth is not a problem and, for practical purposes, has disappeared as it is treated as having no other effects on people or the system.
  • Problems with government charges for illth are discussed below under Pigou, many of these difficulties apply to private negotiations as well.
  • It is not clear how you can always put a monetary cost on illth and suffering, or come to a valid agreement on those ‘costs’; especially if the illth is allowed to continue.
  • Illth is often produced by powerful people, and economics ignores the power and riches relations generally present, and the ways those relations could affect, or distort, any agreements likely to be reached on the monetary cost of illth.
  • Economics often seems to presume that ‘the invisible hand’ with its claimed beneficial emergent order will get rid of the problem, or make everything else so much better it no longer matters. This is simply optimism not a basis for governance or for disregarding harm.
  • Often it seems the theory is attempting to protect companies from any responsibility.
  • The energy and attention costs of cleaning up long term illth is ignored. Apparently it will just go away, as it it were ‘waste.’
  • Free market arguments tend to propose that penalties and regulation always, without exception, make everything worse, but that the market always works out fine for everyone, irrespective of their position in the power relations. This almost certainly fantasy.

There also seems to be a large amount of dispute about what the main hero economists thought on this issue.

History: Pigou, Hayek and Coase

Pigou and his objectors

Historically the idea begins with Pigou, although he does not appear to use the term ‘externality’. Pigou’s basic economic principle was:

the economic welfare of a community of given size is likely to be greater (1) the larger is the volume of the national dividend, and (2) the larger is the absolute share of that dividend that accrues to the poor.

Pigou Economics of Welfare 4th edition p 5-6

Not a currently fashionable position

In a chapter on the divergence between marginal social net product and marginal private net product (Chapter IX), he writes:

It thus becomes important to inquire in what conditions the values of the social net product and the private net product of any given (rth) increment of investment in an industry are liable to diverge from one another in either direction.

174

This is a problem not only when private riches overwhelm social wealth, but when the effects or costs of private investment comes “as a positive or negative item, to other people.” He examples Irish farmers who pay for improvements to farms owned by others.

He suggests that a problem arises because the costs of illth are not borne by those producing it, so they are not discouraged from its production. He argues that an appropriate tax, or price, on illth, equivalent to the harm inflicted on others, would lower the profitability of illth production. For example, makers of alcohol should be “debited with the extra costs in policemen and prisons which it indirectly makes necessary” (p 186).

This charge, assumes the harm can be priced, the damage can be fixed, or that cost discourages illth production, which would probably depend upon the profits being made. This would seem to be best as a matter of experiment, not of dogma.

As we might expect, neoliberal [1] [2] [3] economists think taxing illth production, is government interference in the market and hence bad.

  • It is alleged the government cannot know what the best price is, and hence it will be wrong and produce terrible disasters. The EU Carbon trading scheme can be used as an example of a system which did not work very well at the beginning – largely because it was too generous to business to avoid trouble for the EU, however, some levels of air pollution have now decreased (https://wordpress.com/post/cmandchaos.wordpress.com/11300 and https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/mar/13/air-pollution-levels-have-improved-in-europe-over-20-years-say-researchers). However, this criticism of tax solutions ignores the possibility of experiment, or of gradually increasing charge for the illth with no exemptions.
  • Instabilities, and changes in government, may destroy any such prices, tax or trading schemes, especially (although this seems rarely mentioned) due to the influence of powerful and wealthy industries who want to continue illth production. This problem has been experienced in Australia with the carbon price being repealed by pro-corporate government..
  • Lack of a global carbon price or tax, might incentivize companies to go where pollution is cheapest, which is a particular problem if the pollution diffuses, as with CO2.
  • It is difficult to estimate the cost of damage done by illth. It is difficult to measure emissions from individual factories and across an industry.
  • Another argument suggests that If people want non-polluting energy then, if non-polluting energy is cheaper people will purchase it. This ignores established powers in the market, and their ability to corrupt the information in the price system, or to corrupt people’s response to that information.
  • Pollution can be said to be an engineering problem, not an economic problem, while at the same time suggesting engineering is driven by economics. Spontaneous new technology is the solution.
  • One writer states that a tax/charge is unfair because it only punishes the polluter, and ignores the impact of the polluted, who are causing the polluter damage “by being there and causing a tax to be imposed on the other business.” [cf 3]. Possibly this rather odd idea may come from Coase, who assumes that externalities are reciprocal [check], and that there must be two specific parties interacting for an externality to exist. Hopefully the term ‘reciprocal’ was not meant to indicate the parties are equally responsible (deleting power relations) or that there can only ever be two parties at a time, or that a party cannot harm itself.

[Barnett, A. H.; Yandle, Bruce (24 June 2009). “The end of the externality revolution”. Social Philosophy and Policy. 26 (2): 130–50. doi:10.1017/S0265052509090190. S2CID 154357550.]

In all, the problem with the idea of tax or charge for illth appears to be that economists popular with governments and companies tend to see any governmental planning as the road to serfdom, because it suggests that the market may not always find the best way forward by itself. However, we may wonder how much better private transactions will be in estimating monetary substitutions for the harm of illth, all the time. Again, an expected increase in the charge may help provide incentive to reduce the illth.

Hayek

Hayek by his support for dictatorships in Chile, Argentina and Portugal and his response to criticism on this issue, appears to have thought that governments who murdered, tortured and’ disappeared’ their citizens, as long as they dictatorships did not, or might not, interfere with the market or with business profits, were far less tyrannous than governments who tried to plan for the betterment of everyone. Following this lead many Hayekians propose that free markets may have nothing to do with welfare. In which case, of course we can ask what is their point? Power? Unequal riches? Lack of general welfare? etc. and is that the kind of market they want. It is not clear what Hayek would have thought about climate change, but his apparent concern for protecting companies rather than people’s ‘rights’ (which he always dismissed) and safety, suggest he would leave it to the corporate market, and its power relations.

I follow Shahar here. Some people use Hayek, to argue that politically based responses to externalities are guaranteed to fail. for example::

  • [Carden, Art. 2013. “Economic Calculation in the Environmentalist Commonwealth.” Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 16: 3-16.;
  • Cordato, Roy E. 1997. “Market-Based Environmentalism and the Free Market: They’re Not the Same.” Independent Review 1: 371-86.;
  • McGee, Robert W., and Walter E. Block. 1994. “Pollution Trading Permits as a Form of Market Socialism and the Search for a Real Market Solution to Environmental Pollution.” Fordham Environmental Law Journal 6: 51-77.]

While other Hayekians argue that Hayek would have supported aggressive environmental protections on the same grounds that he defended liberty, property, and markets in economic arenas:

  • [DiZerega, Gus. 1992. “Social Ecology, Deep Ecology, and Liberalism.” Critical Review 6: 305-70.,  
    • 1996a. “Towards an Ecocentric Political Economy.” Trumpeter 13.
    • 1996b. “Deep Ecology and Liberalism: The Greener Implications of Evolutionary Liberal Theory.” Review of Politics 58: 699-734;
  • Gamble, Andrew. 2006. “Hayek on Knowledge, Economics, and Society.” In The Cambridge Companion to Hayek, edited by Edward Feser, 111-31. New York: Cambridge University Press;
  • O’Neill, John. 2012. “Austrian Economics and the Limits of Markets.” Cambridge Journal of Economics 36: 1073-90.]

In treated useable resources Hayek was blatantly optimistic. He noticed that “fertility of the soil, can only be expected to endure permanently if we take care to preserve them.” (2008, Pure theory of Capital: 72). This preservation is said to be part of the problem of maintaining and reproducing capital so as to permanently elevate prosperity (??102). As Shahar shows, for Hayek, this does not really mean conservation, but replacing “each resource that is being used up with a new one that will make at least an equal contribution to future income.” There is no need to keep the “total stock of natural resources… intact,” as used up land can be abandoned and this is not reprehensible or wasteful, because it is in the nature of monetary capital to be used (Constitution of liberty 1960: 323 [collected works 496]). However, while land can function as capital, it is not just capital or money and using it up does not always have no effects. Hayek states:

most consumption of irreplaceable resources rests on an act of faith. We are generally confident that, by the time the resource is exhausted, something new will have been discovered which will either satisfy the same need or at least compensate us for what we no longer have, so that we are, on the whole, as well off as before. We are constantly using up resources on the basis of the mere probability that our knowledge of available resources will increase indefinitely.

(constitution 1960, 319)

We might say that the pathology of capitalism is based on sentiments like this. However, as some resources have been replaced in the past with different ones, this does not mean we can assume that all resources can always be so replaced. Judging by the awkward phrasing Hayek realises there is a potential problem, but wants to embrace a magic pudding economy.

As well as potentially encouraging harm, Hayek also warns about protections against harm:

Industrial development would have been greatly retarded if sixty or eighty years ago the warning of the conservationists about the threatening exhaustion of the supply of coal had been heeded; and the internal combustion engine would never have revolutionized transport if its use had been limited to the then known supplies of oil (during the first few decades of the era of the automobile and the airplane the known resources of oil at the current rate of use would have been exhausted in ten years). Though it is important that on all these matters the opinion of the experts about the physical facts should be heard, the result in most instances would have been very detrimental if they had had the power to enforce their views on policy

(constitution 320)

Experts get in the way of capitalist know-how? Hayek also threatens us with the tragedy of the commons:

no individual exploiter will have an interest in conserving [commons], since what he does not take will be taken by others (1960, 319).

But, for once, he relies on the well managed commons principle. Commons may work out, if people “agree to be compelled, provided this compulsion is also applied to others” (Law, Legislation, and Liberty, vol. III: The Political Order of a Free People. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1981: 44)

Hayek also argues that while people should have regulations that force them to use the market (probably as the price system is the only information system he trusts, and failure and misery should be allowed to occur, if you are not rich), the market should not be told what to do, as actors would have:

“no chance to use their own knowledge or follow their own predilections. The action performed according to such commands serves exclusively the purposes of him who has issued it” (1960, 132)

having direction or paying charges is not the obstruction of use of knowledge. This is just hyperbole to stop capitalists being constrained, to demonstrate faith in markets.

A free market approach is said by some to mean that people would see the dangers, rebuild cities on higher land, use fish farms, invent profitable heat tolerant crops and so on. This assumes there are not unintended consequences of fish farms, that there is land inland which is not already being used, and that heat tolerant crops do not prove vulnerable in some other unexpected way. However, the main objection to the proposal is that nothing like this is happening in market societies, and that cannot just be blamed on governments. And if we need ideal free markets, then we might as well give up, as they will never happen, due to plutocrats buying governments to support their advantages.

Free marketeers are relying on top down planning from corporations who only are concerned about profit and appearance. We may need to rely more on local movements.

  • Steve Rayner, “How to Eat an Elephant: A Bottom-Up Approach to Climate Policy,” Climate Policy 10, no. 6 (2010): 615–21, https://doi.org/10.3763/cpol.2010.0138.
  • Steve Rayner, “Uncomfortable Knowledge: The Social Construction of Ignorance in Science and Environmental Policy Discourses,” Economy and Society 41, no. 1 (2012): 107–125.

Coase

Ronald Coase [“The Problem of Social Cost Journal of Law and Economics, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 1–44], objected to Pigouvian taxes, by alleging that all externality costs, could be resolved by strong property rights and market bargaining, and hence made ‘internalities’ in the market.

  • The first obvious objection to this kind of procedure is that the atmosphere, rivers, oceans and migratory animals are not generally private property, and can range across countries. It would also be unpleasant to be charged for breathing. Hence it is hard to negotiate over the main forms of climate illth due to its dispersion.
  • If the polluter owns what is being polluted or the owner does not care, then it becomes impossible to reduce pollution.
  • Property and borders are also rendered complicated by the fact that multiple organisations all over the world are polluting, and those companies who can avoid Coasian bargaining can benefit from pollution. Examples of this occur in Carbon Accounting whereby the burning of, say, Australian originating fossil fuels, does not count against Australia’s emissions totals – even if it profited from that transaction.
  • Another objection is that the more powerful the illth maker may be with respect to the harmed, the more they will be able to refuse participating in a genuine transaction. This happens commonly when people have been poisoned by work, and it takes what is usually a massively unequally funded court case to get anywhere, and people may be dead before they are compensated, as with Australian asbestos cases.
  • Or someone may be able to come up and say. “I’m founding a polluting business, down the street that will possibly drive away your customers. It would be sad if your business got broken, you know what I mean, I want [blah] a month to stop.” The transaction is essentially a bribe, or protection.
  • It may also be impossible for me to pay the cost of not polluting to the polluting company if they do stop polluting.
  • There is no guarantee market participants will know the value of not-polluting either. That does not make whatever agreement we come to the best possible agreement.
  • In some cases the full costs of the pollution may be paid by unknown people, or people who have not been born yet, for example those people born into our future, a world of completely out of control climate change.
  • In most cases we might think that the purpose of taxes and charges, is to stop the pollution, rather than to have people to decide on what compensation they want for the pollution, or how much money or cost a polluter wants to stop polluting.
  • There is no reason to assume that a monetary cost can always be imposed upon the illth, or the trouble of bargaining, agreed to.
  • If the illth is diffuse then, the actual short term cost might be so small that no one can be bothered to sue the company for restoration. Hence the illth continues to grow.

Some have argued that Coase is arguing that after transaction costs are taken into account, then there is no problem, even if the illth has not gone away. Dahlman adds, in “The Problem of Externality” (1979), that once we recognise levels of uncertainty then we cannot easily claim the Externality wasn’t internalized by somebody or other. Note this says nothing about the illth, even though it attempts to make it vanish, it just says that no one is financially responsible, ever.

A writer for the ‘free market’ Cato Institute writes without any apparent irony after giving an example of Coasian trading in action: “well‐​defined and tradable property rights abolish externalities, even if the pollution remains.” We will apparently get the least monetarily costly arrangement, even if it leaves the illth alone. It appears for these economists that there is no real world other than the price system. James Buchanan apparently adopts the position, that if the polluted don’t notice the pollution, then its not harming them. The obvious consequence from that position is not to lower the pollution but the amount of information about its harms.

  • Externality,” by James M. Buchanan and Wm. Craig Stubblebine. Economica 29(116): 371–384 (1962).

Buchanan also argues that comparison of the current word with a world in which illth of the type under discussion is not present is a fantasy.

To argue that an existing order is ‘imperfect’ in comparison with an alternative order of affairs that turns out, upon careful inspection, to be unattainable may not be different from arguing that the existing order is ‘perfect… [There is] nothing in the collective choice process that will tend to produce the ‘ideal’ solution, as determined by the welfare economist.”

Politics, Policy, and the Pigovian Margins,” by James M. Buchanan. Economica 29(113): 17–28 (1962).

Yes but it is also a fantasy to assume that illth can always be ignored.

Saying that the market cannot solve, or has not, solved these problems can be dismissed as thinking the government could do better – which is presumably obviously untrue [Externality: Origins and Classifications,” by Donald J. Boudreaux and Roger Meiners. Natural Resources Journal 59(1): 1–33 (2019)]. It can hardly do much worse.

Another Free market writer states:

What is called “pollution” is the use of a non-owned resource without compensation. In some situations, there are no private owners, as with the air. If there were, they could demand compensation for permission to use the resources, as with ordinary purchases. The consequences would be “internalized” on the responsible person, and pollution might be avoided or reduced

This argument functions as a way of protecting companies who destroy commons, or ‘public goods,’

In a similar mode, Candela writes that when ‘externalities’ occur “[i]t simply implies the failure of the conditions of the market process to exist, not the existence of market failure” (see Candela and Geloso 2020). But this is happening in a market, and no market is perfect, so its just a way of saying that when markets fail, there are no real markets, which is a sleight of hand to excuse harmful business activity in real existing markets.

Expectations

Some say that externalities must be unexpected, because people will always (if sensible) factor expected costs or harms into their lives.

“Externalities exist only when another party’s actions create unexpected spillover effects,” “Insofar as no one’s legitimate expectations are upset,.. no externality occurs.” The bargains have been made and the receivers of negative externalities indirectly compensated. “The problem, if one asserts there is a problem, is the structure of property rights” [Externality: Origins and Classifications,” by Donald J. Boudreaux and Roger Meiners. Natural Resources Journal 59(1): 1–33 (2019)]

If you move near a motorway then you have no right to demand compensation for the pollution you suffer, as that pollution (possibly) gave you a cheaper house price, or you figured that other benefits of the area compensated you for the financial ‘cost’ of breathing polluted air. There is therefore no need to reduce illth produced by the motorway’s use. In this system it appears that no one should be able to claim that climate change is unexpected so companies should bear no cost for the climate change that they have generated. If I am reading this correctly, then this theory seems to be another way of protecting polluters from their responsibilities.

Another fundamental part of the issue, is there can be uncertainty or incomplete information about who is responsible for damages or contract restrictions. Coase apparently implies that complete information must exist for his solution to work, along with rationality. However, uncertainty and incompleteness are normal in complex systems, so to imply that perfect and complete information is needed for something to work, is one indirect way of saying it will not work.

Technologies of corporatism

One question that might be worth asking is: “Is it market failure, or market success that increases illth?” Increasing illth increases profitability in the short term.

Is the presence of corporations as a technology which structures a group so that investors only have a limited liability for the harms they are profiting from, part of the cause of illth?

Liability and the Known Unknown”. Duke Law Journal. 68: 275–332. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3121519. ISSN 1556-5068. S2CID 44186028 – via SSRN. Hansmann, Henry; Kraakman, Reinier (May 1991). “Toward Unlimited Shareholder Liability for Corporate Torts”. The Yale Law Journal. 100 (7): 1879. doi:10.2307/796812. ISSN 0044-0094. JSTOR 796812.]

If fossil fuels do not get more expensive to produce, the fossil fuel companies do not issue propaganda, or buy or threaten governments, and renewables do not get more profitable, then the illth of GHG will continue if left to the market.

The theory of externalities seems largely designed to avoid the problem of illth production or to avoid reducing it.

The failure of market economics to apparently get the problem, means that the only plausible remedies seem legal and governmental ones.

  1. A government charge for illth production, that gradually and regularly increases, until the illth production is no longer profitable. The monies raised from the charge to be used for illth remediation.
  2. Defining economically produced illth as illegal, with a period to allow adjustment to this proclamation. Followed by other sources of illth, with people having the right to bring government subsidized cases against illth production and to fund remediation.

Polanyi on the rise of Fascism

March 17, 2024

Some degree of planning is probably useful when facing challenges, even granted the limited predictability of complex systems. Businesses need to plan all the time. However, as argued in the previous post, free market advocates attack government planning, especially planning for general welfare and protection from the market, as “a denial of freedom.” The only essentials of freedom are said to be “free enterprise and private ownership” (265). This could be said to be ‘Class War’ because it guarantees

the fullness of freedom for those whose income, leisure, and security need no enhancing, and [gives] a mere pittance of liberty for the people, who may in vain attempt to make use of their democratic rights to gain shelter from the power of the owners of property.

265

These objections to action means that the State becomes useless in facing challenges, particularly those challenges generated by the economic system. It may even privatise some of its operations, making itself and its people more vulnerable to the illth of the market. Polanyi argues that the “victory of fascism was made practically unavoidable by the [free marketeer’s] obstruction of any reform involving planning, regulation, or control” (265).

Freedom cannot flourish in a complex society without support for everyone to be free, or without enabling people to use their freedom. This requires law, regulation, and spending – without spending to help the ‘lower classes’, only the richest are free. It is not freedom to be at the beck and call and whims of a boss, to be the victim of plutocratic corporate planning, or to have no future.

Polanyi points out, that despite the free market ideology, no society is possible in which power and compulsion are completely absent, nor is it possible to have a world in which force has no function. What the free market people appear to want is not a world without power, but a world in which only corporate force can exist, democracy is pointless and the powerful can avoid responsibility for the consequences of their actions. For them the market is absolute good, and the democratic State is bad. The authoritarian state which protects the market is far better. Hence their sympathy to the idea of fascism, which might otherwise be hard to explain.

This [reluctance to plan for freedom] leaves no alternative but either to remain faithful to an illusionary idea of freedom and deny the reality of society, or to accept that reality and reject the idea of freedom. The first is the liberal’s [free marketeer’s] conclusion; the latter the fascist’s. No other seems possible.

(266)

In keeping with the implicit arguments of free market people, fascists protect the market economy and society from collapse, through the “extirpation of all democratic institutions, both in the industrial and the political realm” (245).

Essentially, the defense of free markets, and the diminution of democracy and government planning for general welfare, provides the situation for the rise of fascism.

While people may want to explain fascism by factors such as cultural history “there was no type of background — of religious, cultural, or national tradition — that made a country immune to fascism, once the conditions for its emergence were given” (246).

While fascism aimed at getting a mass following, it is not remotely a democratic or popular movement. Its strength

was reckoned not by the numbers of its adherents but by the influence of the persons in high position whose good will the fascist leaders possessed, and whose influence in the community could be counted upon to shelter them from the consequences of an abortive revolt, thus taking the risks out of revolution

(246)

This means that “fascist tactics were invariably those of a sham rebellion arranged with the tacit approval of the authorities who pretended to have been overwhelmed by force” (238). Fascists were invited in, to save the anti-worker forces and boost the conservative and pro-corporate, counter revolution (248). The elites pretended they had yielded to the people, to give the changes legitimacy.

In the fascist rebellion, the anti-democratic anti-egalitarian authorities preserved and “the bulwarks of democracy and constitutional liberties were stormed and their defenses found wanting in… spectacular fashion” (247), through being weakened by ‘free market’ politicians.

In Prussia, in July 1932, the legal government of the Social Democrats, entrenched in the seat of legitimate power, capitulated to the mere threat of unconstitutional violence on the part of Herr von Papen. Some six months later Hitler possessed himself peacefully of the highest positions of power, whence he at once launched a revolutionary attack of wholesale destruction against the institutions of the Weimar Republic and the constitutional parties. To imagine that it was the strength of the movement which created situations such as these, and not to see that it was the situation that gave birth in this case to the movement, is to miss the outstanding lesson of the past decades.

(247)

Summary

Polanyi argues that the fascist takeover comes about because free market supporters depower the State, de-democratise the State, imperiling freedom and organisation for most people, and destroying the capacity of the State to face challenges. This produces insolvable problems, as no planning or discussion can be allowed. Fascists with the support of the desperate elites (conservatives and free marketeers), resolve these challenges by asserting their power over the State and destroying non-corporate freedom completely. We can also suspect that fascism gave a morality of heroism, co-operation and self-sacrifice to the Nation, which people found more satisfactory than the self-interest of free markets.

I think that Polanyi ignores the importance of scapegoats and hatred to fascists. They were struggling against evil leftists, evil academics, artists, Jews, immigrants and so on. Those creatures were responsible for the troubles ordinary people faced, and so there was no need to challenge the real power elites, who could relax, knowing anger was being displaced elsewhere.

Relevance

This is relevant today because the dominant neoliberals on both sides of politics inhibit government action to help preserve freedom and general welfare, or to act on climate change and ecological destruction, because this might impinge on the ‘freedom’ of the market, to pay low wages, siphon off profits to the elites, or pollute.

The problems are accumulating. Hence neoliberals are shifting to support authoritarian leaders who will (in turn) support corporate action, freedom to pollute, freedom to discard staff, and freedom from having any responsibility for the damage they have caused.

Republicans have basically handed their party over to Trump and authoritarianism. People in the UK seem to be trying for a less leader-focused lack of responsibility in the elites. In Australia the media has promoted the more corporate friendly parts of One Nation, and the Coalition. Everywhere it seems like people are fed up with ineffectiveness, but having their anger displaced onto vulnerable scapegoats and voting for authorities.

The binary options seem to be restore democratic, active and responsible government that can face challenges, or get in the authoritarians who will purge people, protect business, and generate new challenges.

Comments on Polanyi’s assertions about the failure of the 19th Century economy

March 17, 2024

Quotes from The Great Transformation

The economist and political theorist Karl Polanyi argued that 19th century society failed because of “the measures which [it] adopted in order not to be… annihilated by the action of the self-regulating market.” This ‘free market’ conflicted with “the elementary requirements of an organized social life” and produced the “strains and stresses which ultimately destroyed that society” (257). Capitalist markets are destructive of life and freedom even if they are constructive in other ways.

The problem arose from organising the economy on the principles of self-interest. As Polanyi points out “Such an organization of economic life is entirely unnatural, in the strictly empirical sense of exceptional.” It tried to naturalise its oddness, by claiming that all contrary behavior was “the result of outside interference” (257).

However, while self-interest exists, it is not the only principle of human action. There are also factors going beyond the calculating little self, like co-operation, compassion, charity, generosity and so on, all of which are needed for a satisfying life. Perhaps reduction to this simplicity comes from a market which expects it and destroys satisfaction in order to persuade people to consume what is unneeded.

More to the point, these so called “free markets” are also engineered by force:

Economic history reveals that the emergence of national markets was in no way the result of the gradual and spontaneous emancipation of the economic sphere from governmental control. On the contrary, the market has been the outcome of a conscious and often violent intervention on the part of government [or business] which imposed the market organization on society for noneconomic ends. (258)

Moreover, the supposed separation of politics and economic, which has never happened, served political purposes, to produce freedom foe some “at the cost of justice and security” and liberty for most other people who were condemned by riches, and kept in powerlessness. It was not a political decision to keep them dependent on ‘their betters’ for survival and to pay them low wages, it was what the impersonal economy demanded. Yet it may be worth preserving the ideas of “moral freedom and independence of mind” for all, not just the dominant class. It is that freedom, when used from the point of view of those suppressed by the economy, that suggests the economy does not deliver what it promises. As we see today, markets do not always deliver liberty and prosperity for all, they may even deliver authoritarianism (as discussed in the next part of this blog).

The shifting of industrial civilization onto a new nonmarketing basis seems to many a task too desperate to contemplate. “They fear an institutional vacuum or, even worse, the loss of freedom. Need these perils prevail?” (258).

As Polanyi points out, this current market is already permeated by loss of freedom for most people, employment with unlivable wages, economic crashes, profiteering, inability to act because of lack of money or leisure etc. The market was curtailed for a while after WWII, but came back in the 1970s to 80s. Now we have the additions of climate change, ecological destruction and plutocracy. Not doing something may be a greater danger.

The removal of corporately controlled ‘free markets’ will not be the end of markets, trade and exchange flourished long before capitalism and wage labour, but it could be the end of treating people and land as commodities controlled by the market, able to be dismissed cheaply or destroyed for profit.

With a new economy, freedom might not be as constrained by market forces.

The current corporate free market market not only seems unnatural and suppressive of humanity, but is kept going by force. It is becoming less easy to keep going by force the more that ecologies ‘fight back’ against their destruction and produce conditions under which those markets, and market societies, likely cannot exist in a vaguely satisfactory way.

However, the danger is that people may attempt to resolve (not solve) these challenges by a resurgence of authoritarianism, which suppresses people and awareness of the real issues, while favouring the Party and the rich elites. In short, we are threatened by a fascism which will make the situation worse.

Neoliberalism: its knowledge and free markets are weak

March 15, 2024

Neoliberalism is not just an economic theory but a cosmology, and a political/ethical way of understanding humans and the universe. As such, it is extremely limited, and hence surprisingly weak in some ways.

Neoliberalism attempts to govern complexity and emergence by only attending to markets. It possibly rightly warns of the dangers of government planning and of concentrated government power, as (due to complexity) no government planning can be based on a total understanding of the world system (or ‘Gaia’), and governmental power can interrupt and disrupt beneficial processes. It tends to see all government action on behalf of ‘the majority of the people’ (such as livable minimum wages, social security etc) as leading to totalitarianism. Neoliberalism supports its position by suggesting that the market acts as both an information system and as a responsive system generating spontaneous and beneficial order. As such it tends to argue that markets can solve all problems, and that governments are necessarily sources of disruption, corruption and inefficiency, and should do little beyond supporting the market, enforcing contracts and providing military defence.

In order to make these claims neoliberalism ignores some important factors. It ignores the effects of corporate power and planning and riches, by assuming that rich people and organisations will not ally and plan together, organise to structure markets in their favour, or have enough power to affect the system. It denies that the power of riches could be as disruptive and ignorant as the power of government. It also does not appear to consider that attending to price systems as information systems emphasises price signals, profit and the power of others to disrupt profit, while suppressing or distracting people from other vital information. It lives within self-produced disinformation. It also downplays the possibility neoliberal corporately bought governments may be encouraged by market participants to support established markets and market players and throttle emergent or necessary change or correction.

In other words neoliberalism may well cut itself off from information vital to its sustainability, and interfere with systemic processes to disrupt its survival. It also seems to ignore the idea that Gaia is relevant to economies, and propose that markets have no limits which they should refrain from disrupting. Neoliberalism encourages a politics of unboundedness, which is not currently founded on fact. Neoliberals largely ignore climate change and ecological destruction, although they would acknowledge them as price signals. Limits are only known as far as they affect profits, and that might encourage (or not hinder) destructive practices to maintain profits.

Discussing neoliberalism’s success as a cosmology and method of preserving corporate power from challenges may give the impression that it is a system of total control. Neoliberalism may be a system which encourages a type of total control that reduces every possibility to some form of profit or capitalist organisation and evaluation. There is also the possibility of its followers using some kind of corporate fascism (as capitalists did in the 1920s and 30s) to maintain stability, but complexity means that control cannot be total, or feel total – it is distributed. Neoliberals my try so hard because they always fail to make everything capitalist.

Neoliberalism is vulnerable to its own success in removing visible opposition, the lack of perception it encourages, the interstitial gaps it produces and cannot recognise, and the resistance it generates. If many of the rich elites are concerned with escaping from the world crisis as suggested by Bourdieu and Rushkoff, then that is an indication they have no solutions they have any faith in, and hence that their weakness is growing.

There is also the possibility that some of the harmful effects of neoliberalism such as growing inequalities, massive ecological destruction and climate change are unintended consequences of its practices, rather than the product of deliberate evil (Keen #)[j1] . This possibility might also change the way we approach it.